Add These Team-Themed Drinks to Your Super Bowl Party

WARWICK, RI – Whether you’re hosting this year’s Super Bowl party or visiting as a guest, one key to a great time is having the right drinks. Beer, of course, is a staple of football game drink menus — but this is a special occasion, so why not expand the cocktail selection with a few team-themed concoctions?

Here are a few simple recipes representing New England and Philadelphia that require easy-to-find ingredients so you don’t break the bank while showing off your mixology skills.

For an easy recipe that sticks to basic ingredients, try this Manhattan-style concoction. The Uprising will add smooth vanilla and caramel undertones and robust coffee and mocha notes to the sweetness of the vermouth and spice of the bitters.

Combine whiskey, vermouth, and bitters in a cocktail shaker filled with ice. Shake and strain into a chilled martini glass; garnish with cherry.

The Northern 75

This is a variation on the Southern 75, which is, in turn, a twist on the classic French 75.

And it’s quite a mouthful: The sweet and oaky flavor of the bourbon, the hoppy notes of the IPA and a hint of citrus bite smoothed out with the rich sweetness of real maple syrup [no high fructose corn syrup here!] make for a unique blend of flavors.

6 oz. Proclamation The Stalk IPA

2 oz. Sons of Liberty New England bourbon

¾ oz. fresh-squeezed lemon juice

½ oz. pure maple syrup

Pour the beer into a chilled Collins glass. In a cocktail shaker filled with ice, combine the bourbon, lemon juice, and syrup and shake. Strain the bourbon mixture into the beer and garnish with a lemon twist.

Named after Philadelphia’s most famous landmark, this cocktail brings summertime fruit notes to the bourbon for a nice blend of sweet and smoky.

2 oz. Sons of Liberty bourbon

1 oz. peach schnapps

dash apricot brandy

dash Campari

Lemon twist to garnis

In a cocktail shaker filled with ice, add borbon, schnapps, brandy, and Campari and stir until well chilled, about 25 seconds. Strain into iced martini glass and garnish with lemon twist.

The Bronx

Invented in Philadelphia by a retired Bronx restaurateur, this variation on the martini uses sweet and dry vermouth along with gin and orange juice for a fruity drink that’s not cloyingly sweet. Sons of Liberty’s gin adds some extra brightness to the citrus notes and lots of complexity from its Belgian wheat mash and unique distillation process.